This St. Maarten Beach Has Legendary Landings, Iconic Bars, and Turquoise Water

There’s nothing quite like standing on the sand at Maho Bay. The water shimmers in a dozen shades of turquoise, the waves push against the shoreline, and the air hums with that distinct Caribbean warmth. Then it happens — the engines spool, the crowd looks up, and a jetliner drops low across the horizon. A 737 glides just above your head, so close you can feel the thrust ripple through your chest before it touches down at Princess Juliana International Airport. It’s a moment of adrenaline and awe, repeated again and again on one of the most famous stretches of sand in the Caribbean.
The World’s Most Famous Landings
Maho Bay has become legendary for its perfect vantage point of St. Maarten’s Princess Juliana International Airport. There is no other beach where you can wade into warm surf while widebody jets skim over you, wings cutting against the blue sky, before hitting the runway just beyond the fence. Every arrival is a show, with crowds gathered to film, cheer, and feel the rush of jet blast. For aviation enthusiasts, it’s hallowed ground. For casual travelers, it’s an experience they never forget.
Legendary Beach Bars
The beachfront itself is as lively as the skies above it. Sunset Bar & Grill is Maho Bay’s anchor — a sprawling deck with an oceanfront pool, wall-to-wall views of the runway, and a menu of island cocktails that taste even better when paired with the roar of an arriving jet. Just down the sand, the Driftwood Boat Bar offers a more relaxed scene, where toes dig into the sand under shaded awnings while fresh fish comes off the grill. Together, these beach bars are part of what makes Maho Bay so magnetic: a place where the line between spectacle and celebration blurs into something uniquely St. Maarten.
An All-Day Experience
Spend the morning when the beach is quieter, swimming and relaxing in the turquoise water. By midday, the atmosphere builds as the arrivals begin — regional jets from the islands, turboprops buzzing low, and the main attraction: the long-haul widebodies from North America and Europe. As the sun sets, the party doesn’t stop; the bars pulse with energy, music fills the air, and the crowd lingers long into the night. Maho Bay is more than a beach — it’s a stage, a community, and an all-day performance of Caribbean life.
How to Get to St. Maarten
St. Maarten is one of the easiest Caribbean islands to reach, with nonstop flights from major U.S. gateways including New York, Miami, Atlanta, and Charlotte. International service also connects directly from Canada and Europe. Once you land at Princess Juliana International Airport, you’re already here — Maho Bay begins just beyond the end of the runway, less than five minutes from the terminal. It’s the rare Caribbean beach you can step onto almost as soon as you arrive.
Where to Stay
For the closest experience, Sonesta Maho Beach Resort and Sonesta Ocean Point Resort sit directly at the edge of the bay, offering oceanfront rooms where you can watch the landings from your balcony. Sonesta Maho is all about family-friendly fun with multiple pools, dining venues, and a vibrant atmosphere, while Ocean Point offers an adults-only escape with an elevated, luxurious vibe. Beyond Maho Bay, nearby Simpson Bay and Cupecoy Beach have a wide range of resorts, boutique hotels, and villas, giving you easy access to the spectacle of Maho while offering quieter retreats just minutes away.
Just around the corner, The Morgan Resort & Spa adds a sleek, contemporary option, with an infinity pool overlooking the runway and Simpson Bay Lagoon, modern guest rooms, and a stylish poolside bar perfect for sunset. Beyond Maho Bay, nearby Simpson Bay and Cupecoy Beach have a wide range of resorts, boutique hotels, and villas, giving you easy access to the spectacle of Maho while offering quieter retreats just minutes away.
Guy Britton is the managing editor of Caribbean Journal. With more than four decades of experience traveling the Caribbean, he is one of the world's foremost experts covering the region.